mct ISO 639

Mengisa

  • Geography

    CM Centre region: Lekié division, Sa’a subdivision, Sanaga river bend area between the river and Sa’a.
  • Language Cloud

A language of Cameroon

mct
Mangisa, Mengisa-Njowe, Mengisa-Njowi, Njowe, Njowi
20,000 (1979 SIL), decreasing.
Centre region: Lekié division, Sa’a subdivision, Sanaga river bend area between the river and Sa’a.
Southern Cameroon
6b (Threatened).
Niger-Congo, Atlantic-Congo, Volta-Congo, Benue-Congo, Bantoid, Southern, Narrow Bantu, Northwest, A, Ewondo-Fang (A.71)
High exposure to and 97% intelligibility of Ewondo [ewo]. But Ewondo speakers have only 46% with Mengisa. The Mangisa people speak 2 languages: the Mengisa (Njowi) [mct], spoken in the Lekie division, and Leti [leo], closely related to, and perhaps a dialect of, Tuki [bag]. Eton [eto], the A70 variety reportedly most similar to Mengisa (Njowi) is 90% cognate with Mengisa, but a lower comprehension level (91%) (1990 D. Hatfield and C. Regnier). Lexical similarity: 90%–91% with Eton [eto], 81%–97% with Ewondo [ewo] (Risnes 1989).
Children losing L1 capability, even in the village. Much intermarriage with Eton [eto], Ewondo [ewo] and certain Mbam languages. Children highly bilingual. Home, with other Mengisa, markets. Some young people, all adults. Mixed attitudes. Most also use Eton [eto]. Most also use Ewondo [ewo]. Most also use French [fra]. Some also use Leti [leo]. Used as L2 by Leti [leo].
No literacy program in place. Radio.
Latin script [Latn].
The Mengisa people speak 2 languages: Mengisa (Njowi) and Leti [leo]. Christian.
OLAC resources in and about Mengisa